A famous instance of latent-image stability are the pictures taken by Nils Strindberg, the photographer in S. A. Andrée's ill-fated arctic balloon expedition of 1897.
Arctic | Arctic Circle | Arctic Ocean | Arctic Monkeys | Pancho Villa Expedition | Arctic National Wildlife Refuge | Northern Expedition | Lewis and Clark Expedition | French Antarctic Expedition | 1897 | Vancouver Expedition | Expedition Robinson | Northern Expedition (1926–1927) | Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition | Belgian Antarctic Expedition | balloon | Terra Nova Expedition | Ford Expedition | punitive expedition | Ingrid Andree | Challenger expedition | Canon de 75 modèle 1897 | Arctic Tern | MotorStorm: Arctic Edge | Canadian Arctic Archipelago | Calvert Expedition | Blandowski Expedition | Balloon (aircraft) | Australasian Antarctic Expedition | Arctic Winter Games |
Richard V. Andree (1919–1987), American mathematician and computer scientist.
The museum hosts an exhibition about famous polar expeditions and displays many items, e.g. the balloon gondola from S.A. Andrée's fateful expedition and material from the John Phipps expedition to Svalbard around 1770, as well as several documents that refer to the Norwegian explorers Fridtjof Nansen and Roald Amundsen.
In addition there are remains of several Arctic expeditions, for instance in Virgohamna, Danskøya, the launching point for Swedish engineer S. A. Andrée's failed 1897 attempt to reach the North Pole in a hydrogen balloon.